urszulanki.wikispaces.com  
 
Urszulanki's ELT Wiki

High School students' wikispace project.
A place for creative development through collaborative creation.

 ACTIONS

OUR WORKS:

YouTube projects
What to do?
Global warming
Drugs
Hurricanes

Poems
Kinga,
Paulina,
Marcelina

Recent events at school
Retreat
Open Day,
Play in green

Dream holidays
Philippines
Dubrovnik
NYC
Venice
Vienna

TV channels:
CNBC
NBC Sports
CNN

Newspapers
USA2Day

MindMaps (soon)

Nature in USA
Niagara Falls
Great Canion
Salt Lake
Yosemite National Park
Hudson River

 SEARCH
   

hudsoon.jpghudson.pngThe Hudson River, called Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk in Mahican or as the Lenape Native Americans called it in Unami, Muhheakantuck, is a river that runs through the eastern portion of New York State and, along its southern terminus, demarcates the border between the states of New York and New Jersey. It is named for Henry Hudson, an Englishman sailing for the Dutch East India Company, who explored it in 1609. Hudson originally named the river the Mauritius River in honor of Prince Maurice of Nassau. Early European settlement of the area clustered around the river. The area inspired the Hudson River school of painting, a sort of early American pastoral idyll.
The official source of the Hudson is Lake Tear of the Clouds in the Adirondack Mountains. However, the waterway from the lake is known as Feldspar Brook and the Opalescent River, feeding into the Hudson at Tahawus. The actual Hudson River begins several miles north of Tahawus at Henderson Lake. The Hudson is joined at Troy (north of Albany) by the Mohawk River, its major tributary, just south of which the Federal Dam separates the Upper Hudson River Valley from the Lower Hudson River Valley or simply the Hudson River Valley. South of Troy, the Hudson widens and flows south into the Atlantic Ocean between Manhattan Island and the New Jersey Palisades, forming New York Harbor, at New York Bay, an arm of the Ocean. The Hudson was originally named the "North River" by the Dutch, who named the Delaware River the "South River." This name persists to this day in radio communication among commercial shipping traffic, as well as place names such as the North River Sewage Treatment Plant.[1] It was the English who originated the Hudson name, even though Hudson had found the river while exploring for the Dutch.